Williams v. Public Service Com'n of Utah

754 P.2d 41, 77 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 1988 Utah LEXIS 134, 1988 WL 23028
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1988
Docket860313, 860314 and 860517
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 754 P.2d 41 (Williams v. Public Service Com'n of Utah) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Public Service Com'n of Utah, 754 P.2d 41, 77 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 1988 Utah LEXIS 134, 1988 WL 23028 (Utah 1988).

Opinion

DURHAM, Justice:

This proceeding consolidates a petition for review of a rule formulated by the Public Service Commission of Utah (PSC), a petition for review of the PSC’s denial of an application for a certificate of public convenience and necessity (certificate), and an appeal in a Third District Court civil action for damages. Common to each of these actions is the propriety of the PSC’s conclusion in both proceedings before it that it has no jurisdiction to regulate one-way paging communications services. In the civil action for damages, the trial judge found that one-way paging services are within the PSC’s jurisdiction pursuant to this Court’s decision in Williams v. Public Service Commission, 720 P.2d 773 (Utah 1986).

I. Factual Background

A brief synopsis of the background of the dispute between the parties involved in this consolidated appeal is necessary. For greater factual detail, the reader is referred to Williams v. Public Service Commission, 720 P.2d 773 , 773-75 (Utah 1986) (hereinafter Williams I). 1

In 1962, the PSC granted a certificate to Mobile Telephone, Inc., authorizing Mobile to operate one-way and two-way paging systems. The PSC thereby tacitly exercised jurisdiction over one-way paging systems and continued to do so until 1983. *44 During this period, the PSC granted several certificates authorizing one-way paging to a number of entities, including Williams, who was doing business as Industrial Communications. All but one of the certificates authorized both one-way and two-way paging operations. In the early 1980s, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) deregulated radio frequencies used in paging operations and made an additional sixty-nine channels available in Utah on a first-come, first-served basis. See 47 C.F.R. § 22.501 (a)(1) & (4), (d) & (p)(l) (1986). After receiving permission from the FCC to operate a service on one of the new frequencies, American Paging, Inc., contacted the PSC to determine whether a certificate was also required. In a letter dated June 3, 1983, the PSC notified counsel for American Paging that a certificate was not necessary because the PSC was not statutorily authorized to maintain jurisdiction over one-way paging services. See Williams I, 720 P.2d at 774 n. 4. Relying on this letter, American Paging commenced operations.

In August of 1983, Page America, Inc., filed an application with the PSC to operate a one-way paging service. The matter was set for public hearing during December 1983. Meanwhile, American Paging continued its operations with tacit PSC approval. Williams protested Page America’s application and requested that the PSC issue a cease and desist order to American Paging, preventing it from further business operations. The PSC refused to do so, but did order American Paging to stop soliciting new customers.

After conducting public hearings on Page.America’s application, the PSC determined that it had no jurisdiction over one-way paging services, effectively deregulating the market. The PSC then cancelled the certificates previously issued to both Williams and Mobile Telephone. Williams and Mobile Telephone sought to protect their interests through various motions, including one requesting rehearing by the PSC. Upon denial of the rehearing, they filed an appeal with this. Court that resulted in Williams I. The Court in Williams I found that the PSC should have followed the Utah Administrative Rulemaking Act’s procedures in determining that it had no jurisdiction over one-way paging. 720 P.2d at 776 . Thus, the action was remanded to the PSC for further proceedings consistent with the Court’s findings. Id. at 778 . Williams I was issued on March 4, 1986.

A. American Paging’s Application for a Certificate and Motion to Dismiss

After Williams and Mobile Telephone’s petition was filed in Williams I, but before this Court’s decision was issued, American Paging applied for its own certificate and simultaneously moved for dismissal of its application on grounds that the PSC lacked jurisdiction over one-way paging. American Paging’s motion was not directed toward the decision then pending before this Court, but rather sought to clarify the PSC’s jurisdictional limits in light of newly enacted Utah Code Ann. § 54 -8b-3 (1986), a statute which allowed the PSC to exempt certain sectors of the communications industry from regulation. Throughout the pendency of its application, American Paging continued business operations.

Again seeking to protect his interests, Williams intervened on May 28,1985, in the PSC proceedings regarding American Paging’s application. Over the ensuing months, several other parties intervened, including Mobile Telephone, Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph, and New-Vector Retail Service, Inc. 2 Between the motions to intervene and the date Williams I was issued, numerous parties filed a variety of procedural motions that delayed the *45 PSC’s eventual order until after Williams I had been issued.

In response to American Paging’s application for a certificate and its simultaneous motion for dismissal due to lack of jurisdiction, the PSC issued an order on May 23, 1986, granting American Paging’s motion to dismiss. The order asserted the PSC’s lack of jurisdiction over one-way paging services and specifically stated that Utah Code Ann. §§ 54 -8b-l to -9 (1986) did not affect PSC jurisdiction.

B. PSC Rule-Making Proceeding Pursuant to Williams I

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754 P.2d 41, 77 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 1988 Utah LEXIS 134, 1988 WL 23028, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-public-service-comn-of-utah-utah-1988.